iuztfwa rri n r pte WjFW pr- iV pf P" cr j- ? - -T y - - ;- v..- - ,u; r 1 CHANCE TOR LIFE. Mrs. Maybrick's Many Friends Will 1 Leave Ko Stone Unturned in THEIR EFFORTS TO SAVE HER. Members of Tarliament Take an ActiTe Interest in the Case, ASSISTANCE COMING FKOM AMERICA. The Condemned Woman Firmly Belieres Thst Bne WlUKcrerbe Hanged. Every effort is being made to induce the Home Secretary to interfere to prevent the execution of Mrs. Maybrick. A number of distinguished personages will appeal to him. New evidence in the case is being collected in New York and elsewhere. London, August 9. In addition to the memorial to the Government in behalf ot Mrs. Maybrick, which has been signed by most of the barristers and solicitors of the Liverpool circuit, and the petition which has been circulated among the merchants and brokers, Parliament itself has taken up the case of the condemned woman. A num ber of members of the House of Commons have decided to make a combined appeal to the Home Office for her reprieve. Their action is based not only on the con fusion in the medical testimony taken, but also on the peculiar behavior of the Judge, which has excited a ferment of indignation throughout the country. The (preman of the jury has been interviewed concerning the verdict which he and his fellow jurors so hastily brought in. and he showed no knowledge of the merits of the case, and to be possessed of only a confused notion of the evidence which haa Deen presented in court. A PEPtTMAB JUROR. He did not know that Sir Charles Bussell had oflered in court to call witnesses who would orove that the statement made by the accused was perfectly true, and that Justice Stephen refused to hear this im portant testimony. He admitted that he would not be sorry if a reprieve were granted, notwithstanding his voice in favor of the verdict of murder. The general im pression left by the interview is that the jurors allowed themselves to be swayed and biased br the grossly one-sided summing np of the Judge, and that they gave a hasty verdict without giving the case and the evidence any personal consideration. Mrs. Maybrick is completely prostrated after the terrible strain of the trial, and is unable to see anybody but her mother and her counsel. To her mother Mrs. Maybrick said that but for the Judge's severe com ments and lengthy allusion to the wicked immorality of which she had been guilty, and which she freely admits, the jury cer tainly would have acquitted her. She continues to protest her innocence, and declares that but for her evil connec tion with Brierly and the prejudice occa sioned against her in consequence of her in fidelity to her husband, and to the Judge's strong references to this infidelity, the jury would never have found her guilty on the gimsy though no doubt suspicious facts re tted as evidence against her. SWAKD CONVICTIONS. : added that she had an in- that she Mould not be. many who would remain friend! v to her are making everv effort to ob tain a reprieve. It bad. she considered, been conclusively proved by medical evidence of rae most weighty description mat ner Hus band had not died from arsenical poisoning. She felt that if the medical evidence alone 785 placed before the IforaeiDflice author ities they would never indorse th sentence of the jury a sentence which, despite her terror ana anguish at the time, she knew perfectly well wns not in accordance with the feeling of the general public. Not a single member of the jury was a Liverpool man. The foreman belonged to St. Helens, and all the other jurors WLre drawn in from the diflereut parts of the country. No one had held any communication with them ex cept the waiter who served them with their meals, and his conversation was entirely on business matters. Mrs. Maybrick's two children have, since the commencement of the prosecution, been staying with friends of the family in the neighborhood of Aigbarth. They have been left in complete ignorance of the charge against their mother and have not even been told the cause of her absence, though, they knew their father was dead. If the popular movement for commuta tion fails and the death sentence is carried iuj,-ne lime for hanging rests solely with .he Sheriff. H may be very soon. The law implicitly requires' that three successive Sundays must intervene between the sen tence of death and the day of execution. SOME NEW EVIDENCE. A dispatch from New York says: Bowe and Macklin, counsel for Mrs. Maybrick in this country, have cabled their London solicitors, asking if Home Secretary Mat thews will consider new evidence, if fur nished immediately. Mr. Macklin savs they have considerable evidence to submit, corroborating Mrs. Maybrick's testimony, and also testimony as to' her standing and character socially in this country. He thinks that if this testimony was ad mitted and considered, it would change the aspect of the case to her favor. He ex hibited this afternoon a photograph of Mrs. Maybrick, taken at the age of 20 years, showing a girl, handsome in face and figure with brown hair and large, expressive eyes. "I have known Mrs. Maybrick," he said, "ever since she was 12 years old. She was a sensible, high-minded girl. In 1882 I ac companied her and hermotherto the steamer Celtic, when they started for Europe. Charles Stewart Parnell and Mr. Maybrick both sailed on that vessel, and it was on this voyage that Mrs. Maybrick first met her husband. It seems a strange coincidence that Sir Charles Russell should have been counsel in both Mr. I'arneH's and Mrs. May brick's cases." VERY BARE INDEED. Regarding the chance of interference with the sentence on the part of the Home Secretary, Mr. Macklin said: "They have a curious law in England, providing that where an adverse decision is rendered in any but a murder case, an ap peal can be taken to a higher court, and from that to the House ot Lords; but when the case is murder the decision rendered by the jury is nnal, and the cases where the Judge's sentence has been overruled by the Home Secretary are very rare. Still I hope we can do something." Sir. Macklin says the case is strangely similar to the Witter poisoning case, tried in Denver two years ago, with a verdict of acquittal. He has telegraphed for the records of that trial. Blondin Makes a Rash Water. Paris, August 9. Blondin, the well known rope-walker, has wagered $20,000 that he can walk on a cable from the top of the Eiffel Tower to the central dome ot the Exhibition building in less than five min utes. Spain Will Die Torpedoes. Madrid, August 9. It is officially stated that the Government will adopt submarine torpedo vessels for the Spanish navy, experi ments with the system having been suc cessful. Tlie Greek Idea Not Adopted. VlOTTA, August 9. The Austrian Gov ernment, in reply to Greece's note on the Cretan question, admits the difficulties of the situation in Crete, but objects to the action proposed by Greece. J) HEB 13 Mrs. Maybrick yard conviction , afffea. for tjteMtitkuw, BOULANGER A BAD HAN. A Terr Lone Array of Cbnrces Blade Acalnst Hint by,lhe Government. Paris, August 9. The trial of General Boulanger before thehigh court of the Sen ate was resumed to-day. The Procureur Genera, continuing his Address, charged that General Boulanger had hejd a veritable political court at Clermont-Ferrand, when he was in command of the troops there. He had originated secret intrigues, electoral agitation and a system for corrupting offi cials. Notwithstanding these acts, he had written to the War Office disclaiming any connection with what had been done in his name. Here there were protests from the Senators belonging to the party of the Eight, The Procureur General declared there were documents before the Court which clearly marked the downward path of General Boulanger from Insubordination to intrigue, falsehood and conspiracy. The Government had also evidence to show that General Boulanger had tried to have con veyed to Prince Bismarck the information that he (Boulanger) only desired to be ap pointed Consul fc- life. The Procureur General described the pro ceedings of the League of Patriots at Roche fort, and the initial steps of the attempt against the State, which commenced with the scene at the Lyons depot, .when Bou langer started for " Clermont-Ferrand, and continued until the Longchamp's review, when Boulanger was hiding in Paris await ing the result of his manifesto. The Pro cureur's speech was received with many im- .!- .! r ii.ji. .:n.n TJo The patient cries i aujuutu, avijwtuu. trial was finally adjourned. BAIiFOUB'S DEFENSE. n. Claims Tbat Hit Lnnsnag-e In the Iloase of Commons Wn Justified. London, August 10. Mr. Balfour, Chief Secretary for Ireland, has written a letter in justification of the language he used in Thursday'sdebateonthelrish estimate in the House of Commons. He gives extracts from the Kerry newspaper edited by Mr. Harring ton, in which Magistrate Roche is referred to as "Bloody Balfour' wretched hireling," the police as "Cowardly renegades bribed to butcher the people" and "Uniformed hell hounds delighting in savage work," and Colonel Turner and Mr. Balfour as "Brazen liars." STANLEY SURELY SAFE. S He Is Cornice to the Coast With an Army and Plenty of Ivory. Zanzibar. August 9. Stanley is com ing down the coast with Emin Pasha, 9,000 men and an enormous quantity of ivory. The exact date of his arrival is uncertain. The Germans are doing their utmost to cre ate a disturbance here, and a rising against all Europeans is not only possible, but highly probable. FLIRTATION BY 3IIRE0R. A Novel Blethod of Exchanging Tender Glances Discovered In Buffalo. Buffalo Conner.! A flirtation by the aid of a mirror seems like a novel idea.and yet this was the unique performance witnessed by the Arounder yesterday afternoon. They were standing in front of a soda fountain drinking, of course a youth, and a maiden. She was passinc fair, shy, susceptible, and he, thonghtful, even on the dreamy order, im pressionable Derhaps, but withal a fair spec imen ot intellectual young manhood. It was not until they raised their glasses to their lips that they met each other's eyes in the large mirror above the fountain. She blushed and looked down into her glass, and he grew slightly crimson about the ears and looked out into the street. Presently they raised their glasses a second time, and having grown bolder, they looked a little longer each into the other's eyes and blushed a shade deeper. Then came another breath ing sDell. For their lives ther dared not turn and loot each otber-sqnorely in the face, but the glasses seemed to make matters a little safer at long range. Finally he thought he would have another glass, itwas such "excellent flavor," and she bless her sweet lips thought her glass was a trifle too sweet and asked the clerk if he wouldn't please put in a little more soda. By the druggist's clock they were just six minutes drinking their glasses of soda, and as she walked slowly down the street, tap ping her parasol thoughtfully on the pave ment, and be watched her dreamily from the druggist's door, the Arounder wondered if it was not possible for matches to be made at soda fountains as well as in heaven. HONEST MR. BULLION. An Example In BIoney-GettlBff Which Ho Wished His Son to Imitate. Scottish American.: Mr. Benjamin Bullion is a well-known broker, and he was giving his son a lecture the other day. "Koo, Johnnie," he said, solemnly and impressively, "mind whit I'm tellin' ye, ma son:ahune a' things be honest; let naething drive ye frae the path o' virtue; nae temptation or hope o' gain lead ye frae the narrow way; tak' an example frae yer auld faither. For instance, the ither day a customer o' oors made a mistake in peyin' an account; instead o' gi'en' three thoosan' he owned me an' ma partner he gied me four. "Well, whit dae ye think I did?" "Paid it back," suggested his heir tim idiy. "Hootsl havers," said Bullion, peevishly: "but I'll tell ye whit I did," he continued, in a self-satisfied tone; "ye ken I micht hae kept the haill extra thoosan' to masel'; but no, I gave five hu'nner o't to ma partner." STRAWBERRIES AND SNOWBALLS. Dr. Simons, of Colorado, Tells Where Yon Can Find Both. Washington Fost.1 . Br. Cilivier H. Simons, of Colorado, re cently appointed Consul to Hong Kong, is in town getting instructions for his consul ate. He comes from a region so near the timber line that Washington seems hot and oppressive. "Whew!" he exclaimed last night, "let us get a breath of cool air. I don't like this much. You see, I live in sight of snow the year round. The timber line stretches out as plainly defined as the hair limit on a bald head. Above that line wild flowers grow almost up in the snow. So the oft told travelers tale of 'picking strawberries and making snowballs the same hour is literally true." MAINTAINING A REPUTATION. John A. Logan's Catting Ceboke to a Man ot Donbifal Veracity Washington Po.t.1 A gentleman who knew John A. Logan in Southern Illinois before the war tells us that on a certain occasion young Logan found it necessary to donbt the word of a man and told him so without any circum locution. "Don't yon call me a liar, sir," said the man excitedly; "I have a reputation to maintain, and I mean to maintain it, sir." "I know it," said Logan; "and you are maintaining it-every time.you tell a lie." BURKE IS NOT GUILTI. At Least That Is the Flea He Enters on His Arraignment. CHICAGO, August 9. Martin Burke was brought before Judge Parker in the Crim inal Court this afternoon, and plead not guilty to the charge of cqnspiracy with Daniel Conghlin, Patrick O'Sullivan and the others, jointly indicted with them to murder Dr. Cronin. This formality over, the prisoner was returned to the county jail. BELVA A. L0CKW00B, & patch, gives a detailed description of the home life of France. DEMANDS HIS EIGHTS. A Government Clerk in the New York Deputy Collector's Office REFUSES TO GO WHEN FIRED OUT. He Places Himself Under the Protection of the Civil Service Law . HIS APPEAL TO HARRISON AND WINDOJI Being a.Writer cf Books,. He Bis a Sure If cans of EeitDfo at Hind. A clerk in the New York Deputy tTnited States Collector's office writes Secretary Windom and President Harrison, objecting strenuously to his dismissal on political grounds, he being under civil service regu lations. He writes books, and declares he will get even with thex administration by means of his pen. I6FZCUX, TXLXOBAK TO TOT DISPATCB.1 New Xobk, August 9. P. C. Mac Court, of Deputy Collector Gano's liqui dating division in the Custom House, said to-day that he was from theNorth of Ireland, where they never are at peace unless they're in a fight. Mr. MacCourt had received a letter from Secretary Windom, dismissing him from the service from August 15. He was appointed a messenger in 1885, and as signed to the Internal Revenue Bureau. Two years later he passed a civil service ex amination as a clerk, and last October he was transferred to the 'New York Custom House. Mr. MacCourt sayshe was Rosa D'Erina's guardian and manager, and is the friend ot Mrs. Parnell. He objects to his summary dismissal. He sent this letter to Secretary Windom, at Washington. "I have the honor to acknowledge re ceipt of your favor of the 3d inst., only re ceived this morning, and in which you in form me that my services as clerk in class E in the office of the Auditor of the Treas ury for the Po3toffice Department, will not be required from and after the 15th inst. I protest against this action ft yours, as at once ILLEGAL AND UNJUST, because I am under the protection of the civil service law, of which your action is, in my opinion, and I think that of the public, a flagrant violation and unjust, because for the last four years I have been a faithful and diligent employe of the Treasury De partment, earning from my chiefs the highest encomiums. Three of these years I did clerical duty for $70 a month, many among my Republican friends doing similar duty receiving double the salary under the protection of a Democratic administration. If I am to be a victim because of my Demo cratic principles, then sir, allow me to in form you that the hand that writes this will not fail to make a public example of those sworn to uphold the law, whose sacred majesty is violated in my humble person." Mr. Maccourt says that he does not mean to be understood that he intends to slug anybody when he says "the hand that writes this will not fail to MAKE A PUBLIC EXAMPLE of those sworn to uphold the law, whose sacred majesty is violated in my humble person." Mr. MacCourt writes books with his hand, and through tiicm he will get even if his request is not heeded. He also sent this letter to the President at Bar Har bor: Mr. President As an Irish-American citizen, a race to whom you owe your elec tion in this city and State, I appeal to you, as the executive of the nation, to protect me under the civil service law, from arbitrary dismissal by yourBecretary of-the Treasury. To-day Mr. Windom sent me a printed form, dismissing me from the Treasury De partment, I being classified under the civil service, ann. therefore, I submit, not to be dismissed without cause. I have been four years in the service of the United States Government, two of those years doing cleri cal work at $70 per month in the assessment division of the Internal Revenue Depart ment, for whien my Republican friends doing clerical work received a double sal ary. In this office there were 26 clerks, I being the ONLT DEMOCRATIC APPOINTEE, and during the two years not one of those Republican appointees was removed under Mr. Cleveland's administration. I there fore appeal to you, Mr. President, as the head executive of the Government, to pro tect me in my rights, and to request your Secretary to have me placed on the roll of this custom house, where I have been in the liquidating division for the last nine months, and refer to my record as to how I hane discharged my duty." Neither Mr. McClelland, Acting Col lector, nor Mr. Hunt, Private Secretary, knew of Mr. MacCourt's removal. The awful deed was done in Washington. A SATISFIED SUCKER. He Preferred Living- In the Had to Sizzling In a Frying- Fan. New York Herald. 1 "Why don't you cultivate a little style?" asked a Trout of a Sucker whom he hap pened to meet. "Why do you insist on liv ing in this mud hole and never visit the clear, cold springs? Limber up your body and hire somebody to get a section of a rain bow and sprinkle it over you. I would not live like you for anything, grubbing away' all the time for a meal in the mud. Flies form a delicious diet. Just look at that beauty there which has just dropped on the water. Just watch me take him and then envy the life of a Trout." Saying this, the Trout made a dash for the fly and seized it But the fly had buried in it a steel hook, and on the hook was a line, and on the line a rod, and an angler held the rod. The Trout soon disappeared from the water, and the next noise he made was when he was sizzling over a fire. "It may be nice enough to be a Trout." philosophized the Sucker, "bnt I would rather be a poor, despised Sucker, with no rainbow attachments, in a mud hole than a proud Trout in a frying pan." LEGITIMATE EXAGGERATION, Illustrated by a Neat btory of Charles Lamb and a Bore. London Globe.l Charles Lamb was wont to tell a charm ing story (of his own invention) about Cole ridge. He chanced one day to meet the sage of Higbgate, who as usual seized him by the button and burst into a flood of words. Lamb, who was pressed for time, quietly cut off the button, ana resumed his way into the citvt Returning some hours after he found Coleridge stationed on the self-came spot, with the button in his fingers, still pouring forth the torrent of his speech. This fable is, according to our view, a model ot artitic and legitimate exaggera tion; it stamps, with the brevity which is the soul of wit, more forcibly upon the hearer's mind than conld the most elaborate statement the figure of "the old man elo quent," bursting with exuberance of thought and language, and superlatively careless of his hearer. One More Doable Tragedy. Chicago, August 9. Christian F. Harder, a, well-to-do German, shot his wire dead to-night and then suicided. The trag edy took place on the street after as alterca tion. PABKELL, &SS?&S2SeTSr-& form the theme of an article in to-morrow's UUTAILa, THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. E0MANCE ON THE EIYEB. Charles Hcndrleksan. of Allegheny, Wed ded at Ohio's Gretna Green A Day break Msrris.se and a Bridal Tonrto the East. Cincinnati, August! 9. A marriage under romantio circumstances was cele brated yesterday morning in that Gretna Green of the Ohio Valley Aberdeen, Ohio. It was solemnized Dy that Yenerable and iamou's marrying "Magistrate, 'Squire Bess ley, whose services had been engaged in advance by the happy groom .and blushing lride, Mr. Charles A. Hendrickson and Miss Anna Hildebrand were the names of two passengers on the steamer Katie Stockdale, from up the river. Both were from Alle gheny City, Pa. They are young people, handsome, cultured and apparently pos sessed of wealth. Although in each other's society a great deal of the time on the trip, there was noth ing about their actions that excited in the steamer's officers the slightest suspicion that the couple were journeying toward Aber- ?.in with matrimonial intentions. But SO it-w!m- Thevhftd heard of the fame of 'Squire Beasley, and were resolved that onlv he should make them man and wife. It was still an hour before daybreak wb en the boat landed at Maysville, oppo site Aberdeen. The colored porter who had ben previouslv instructed and properly "tipped,"' awoke the young couple and gtri ded their footsteps to the side of the ves sel, where a small skiff lay moored. The poi ter also acted as oarsman, and under bis Bkillful strokes the boat speedily reached the Ohio shore. On the bank of the river stoi d 'Squire Beasley. in response to the telt graphic summons he had received. I )av was just breaking when Miss Hilde brand and Mr. Hendrickson ranged them seli 'es side by side and were made one. The cert -mony over, they re-embarked, and the hea' vy fog lifting as they were nearly across the .liver, they discovered to their horror that, the Stockdale had left the Maysville wha rf, and was already steaming down the rive,r. Shouting and waving their hand kerc! hiefs, the attention of those on the boat was attracted. She was stopped, and the newly made man and wife were taken on boai'd under a fire of questioning glances. .Li.st evening they arrived in this city, but 1 left almost immediately again for a briaUil tour in the Fust A dispatch from AlltirhenvCitv states that Mr. Hendrick son lis the foreman of a cigar factory in that city.i and is quite well known. He left homi a last Mondav. telline his people he was foing to be married. His family know notbJing of Miss Hildebrand, and can not says ifhether it is an elopement or not. ONE OP THE PR0FESH. Anil itervlew With n. Zulu Who Halls From I . Indiana. NewfTork Sun.1 A I middle-aged man with a satchel be tweei'i his feet sat in front of a Canal street hotel! the other evening when a pedestrian turnc -d aside and accosted him with: "Well, are you off?" "Bleg pardon, sir, but you have the advan tage of me," replied the first. "Well, well, but that's queer. We have been together four weeks." "Xiou you are not " "I i am Ka-bush-ky, the Zulu, who can't speas . a word of English, and prefers raw meat to cooked. You are Tornado Tom, the celeb rated scout and Indian slayer, and are mode tly credited with having killed 37 In diana. We both exhibited from the same platfc rm in the museum." "X'mnderl but so we did! Well, what's new?"' "G oing home to Indiana to-morrow. The old n tan wants me to help him run the gro cery, and I'm tired ot the Zulu business. Too i nnch sameness about it Have to hold a pel .ch stone in my mouth to produce the guttt ral, and it wears on my teeth. Which way you going?" "E ack to Toronto. I'm tired of this cow boy I lusincss. Public asks too many ques tion! . Felle4-come in every day and want' to so e my scars. I've got Dakota, Kansas and Nebraska all mixed up in my geogra phy,, and somebody getsvon to me every day for' a deceiver. It I start out again it will be William Belding, the Australian mur de.iir, who was sentenced to be hanged seven dilfbrent times, but who finally proved his innocence." ""Well, Tornado, so longl" 'Ka-bush-ky, good-by, and may luck go with you." j A HEW USE FOR BIRCH BARE It Is Employed for Uniquely Ornamental Pictures for Parlor Walls. Now Tort San. Ti the many decorative uses' to which the barb of the birch tree is nowadays put by amol Venrs of artistic taste the new and at tract ive device of employirg the bark to mab e pictures has just been added. A who g collection of these noVel pictures are now exhibited by an etching.dealer in up per I Iroadway, and attract a great deal of atten tion from the promenaders of the thor ough fare. Tb 3 pictnres are made by cutting out out line 1 igures of animals and men and women and i children and pasting them on black card I oard, and afterward filling out the other details of the picture with white lead. The o ombination produces a pleasing and sthki ng silhouette effect. Different hues of the bt irk are employed in imparting con trasts d color to the odd pictures. The series of pic tures on exhibition indicate that the bark can be used to produce comic or purely artist ic effects, according to the whim of the picta remaker. . India ink is used to fill in mino- r details of the figures, like eyes, hair, butto ns, or the trimmings of dresses. Tii : birch bark collection includes figures of pij js, horses, cows, dogs, children, pretty girls, negroes, coaches, farm yards, de batin g society folk, soldiers, sailors, angels, yacli ts, steamboats, everything in fact that is ni.ually worked out with a pencil or a brush . in ordinary sketches or paintings. PAINTING THE TOWfi RED. Orlsil of a Phrase Which Soon Came Into General Use. "Pi lintingihe town red," meaning to see the eights or have a lively and convivial time i yhile seeing a to wn, had its origin with athca.trical advance agent. He went to a town, found fiis bills had not reached there, and h. id only a short time to get new ones. The oi lly printing omce there had Ted ink only with which to print them. He had to promise the printers and bill posters to treat then i -to get his work out after working boors. -By these means he soon had the town in a blaze of red, making a conflagra tion of posters, and he and the printers and bill -posters became hilariously drunk over the affair. The next morning the people were astonished at the display of red post ers. Tlie pacer wrote it up and the story spread and became celebrated. The agent in tell ing it said: "I took those fellows out and got them drunk, and we painted the town red. " Since then the phrase has become gem sral. It is not elegant, but it is forcible and has enough meaning in it, as drinking has a tendency to turn thincs red, to stay. It n ill become permanent. C. ILL or send for plans, free, of those desi rable suburban lots, at Aspinwall sta tion., adjoining Sh'arpaburg. r. A. Herron & Sons, 80 Fourth ave. an7.101,3,16,19 dish. Mc IWILLIAMS At her home In North Brad dock, on Friday, August 9, 1889, atill o'clo cK a. Jt, Mart, wife of J. c. He Williams, W liC t MUlJGMt iTho funeral will ocour on Bpsdat Arrit uooi f, August 11, atra o'clock, when funeral services will be held. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 A F0mERK0MAKCE.ft entitl td "QuetU at Camo Iflnetm" ,ui ft I ..; ..-...-. - ---- -1 ..- -- ipuom ocu ki unnuTTuurt uibtaios. SATURDAY, AUGUST ENJOYING HIS OUTING Harrison Secures a Clear Conscience for Lunch by Granting A RESPITE TO TWO MURDERESS. This Was the Only State Affair Brought to His Attention. QUITE AN EXTENSIYETOUR PROPOSED. The BUInes are Karer to Blow Their Guest tho Whole Bute of Miine. The only official act of the President yesterday was the respiting of two murder ers who were to have been hanged at Fort Smith Ark. Mr. Harrison was invited out to luncheon, and participated in an enjoy able buckboard trip. An elaborate pro gramme has been prepared for his entertain ment. Bar Harbor, August 9. President Harrison has begun his stay at Bar Har bor by respiting for three weeks two men who were to be hanged to-day in Arkansas for murder. 'When he crossed the threshold of .the Blaine cottage last night he was handed atelegraphic statement that new and important evidence in the case of Jack Spaniard had been forwarded, and there was a suggestion by the Acting Attorney Gen eral that a respite be granted. In view of the new evidence that is now said to exist a respite until August 30 was telegraphed last night This morning an other telegram reached the President from the United States Judge at Fort Smith, Ark., suggesting in order to avoid two ex ecutions in the same month, one to-day and one on the 30th, that a respite to the latter date should be granted to "William Walker, who was also to have been hanged to-day. This suggestion was also adopted, so other business. These have been the President's only offi cial acts since he arrived in Bar Harbor. Dispatches and important letters are sent on from Washington, though, and a few letters addressed to the President here have been received, making his mail consist of perhaps a dozen letters. To these his pri vate secretary attends. Callers upon the President were quite numerous, though almost entirely consist ing of summer residents of the place, but national affairs were a tabooed subject. Among them were Hon. John B. Thomas, of Illinois; Baron Bosen, the Bussian Min ister, and Captain "Wilse, of the Minnesota. These visitors came at different hours in the day, but the President devoted much of his time to resting. He had slept more hours in the previous night than in any night in three months, he said, and the result was that he felt much refreshed. His first step out of the cottage to-day was toward a buckboard. which was "in talrA lilm trt dtfar'a "Kami a npoftw mffav four or five miles off, where a luncheon had been tendered him by Major Aulick Palmer. QUITE A PARTY. i In the buckboard with him went Secre tary and Mrs. Blaine, Congressman and Mrs. Lodge, Miss Blaine, Mr. Charles Howe, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Cummings, his Secretary, Walker Blaine and Mrs. F. Rollins Morse. The party had left Stan wood about noon. It drove to Major Palmer's cottage. Senator and Mrs. Hale came from Ellsworth in thejnorning. The lunch tables were set on the lawn and under the trees, near the water and in view of the mountains. President Harrison stood upon the. portico while he was intro duced to the prominent summer residents of Bar Harbor and the residents of Ells worth and other places to whom "at home"' cards' had been sen'- Afterward lunch was served.. With" eight'excepliuns all the guests were seated at tables on the lawn. The excep tions were President Harrison, Secretary and Mrs. Blaine, Senator and Mrs. Hale, Mrs. Palmer, the Turkish Minister, and Mrs. Lodge, who lunched in the dining room. Meanwhile the Bar Harbor band played. AH ENJOYABLE AFTEBSOOK. The President spent an enjoyable after noon at this luncheon. By 4 o'clock he was at Stanwood again, and at 7:30 P. II. he made one ot a private dinner party, which included Senator and Mrs. Hale, Mrs. Cbandler, Mrs. Hale's mother, Mr. Chatel Howe, Mrs. Burton Harrison and Mrs. Pat terson. This party numbered 14 in all. To-morrow at 1120 Secretary Blaine will take the President and a small party for a sail to Somes' Sound, on the Sappho. In the evening the Kebo Valley Clnb.of which Mr. Blaine is a member, will hold a re ception in the President's honor. For Sunday no definite arrangements have been made, but on Monday morning, after breakfast, the President will go to Ellsworth as the guest of Senator Hale. He will re mein there till Tuesdav, when he will re turn to Bar Harbor in time for lunch, and Tuesday afternoon he will probably witness the floral parade. "Wednesday morning he will start tor Bath, where he is to lunch with Arthur Sewall, and examine the ship ping and "Wednesday afternoon he will go to Manchester, N. H., spending the night with ex-Governor Cheney. , HE Wlfil KEEP SIOVCTO. Thursday morning be goes to Concord, where he will be received by the New Hampshire Governor and Legislature, and Thursday afternoon he will begin a quick return trip to Washington. If the arrange ments made agree with the present intent be will reach Boston in time to take tbe train for Fall Biver Thursday evening and he will go on by Sound boat and by train to "Washington and the "White House, where he is expected Friday afternoon. . Mrs. Harrison, who is at Nantucket with her sister, may join her husband at Fall Blver if she does not return to Washington before them. The arrangements just out lined have been given tbe finishing touches since the President's arrival and it win be noticed that they include provisions for visiting Moosebead Lake, Poland's Spring or the Profile House. A MYSTERY IN A TOMB. A Wonderful While Tine ThiU Suddenly Changed Into Ashes. AngnitatGa.) Chronicle. 1 For some vears there were no deaths and the silence oftneTtomb was unbroken, save for the visits of loved ones who knelt with out and offered a prayer for the dead or paid loving tribute to their virtues. 'At last death came once more. The good old grand mother bowed to the will of time and dear ones gathered to pay their last respects. The solemn procession wound its slow way to the cemetery. , The door of the vault moved heavily on its hinges as it swung back to receive its dead. A flood -of golden sunlight filled tbe tomb, dispelling the gloom and reveal ing a strange sight. There, creeping along the walls and over the coffins, was a white vine. Pure and pearly it stood out in bold relief against the dark background and glistened in the sunlight. There was no mistaking the resemblance. It was almost a perfect urn. But the wonder did not stop here. Curl ing further on.it formed a letter I), the family initial. Astonishment ceased not here. It was a triple mystery, and the cli max was' yet to be reached. The minister offered up the prayer: "Ashes to ashes and dust to dust," Those who were looking at the white vine-taw it tremble, then tit shook and fell- in fragments, scattering over the coffins of the cjead. A Millinery Fallars for 950,969. Lancaster, August 9. Astriel Bros., ot this city, the largest dealers in millinery in this countv. hare failed for 150.000. A - IjBeta equal to lubilitiei. t- " 10, 1889. A BOLD MOBMON. He Says Joe Smith Will be Avenged What Will Happen When Bformonlsm Overthrows the Government Tronble la Tennessee. Nashville, August 9. The Mormon trouble in "Wilson county has been settled temporarily by the expulsion of one of the most active of the proselyting elders. The excitement, however, has by no means subsided, and the remaining elders are threatened with coats of tar and feathers if they, too, do not clear out. The elder who was driven from the county delivered an exordium Sunday. He told his sympathizers that the Mormons owned the country: that they were preparing to take it by force.and that the church was organiz ing an army for that purpose and to punish scoffers and non-believers with death. Said he: "The blood of Joseph Smith must be J avenged, and God commands us to over throw this Government for its oppression of the Saints. The greet wine press of his wrath has not yet been trodden. We are to tread it. and tread, it we will until we have pressed out the last drop of blood and the national and personal existence of these ac cursed people.." ' One of his proselytes became alarmed at the excitement created in the Mormon com munity bv theie words, and reported them to Bev. John Barrett. The latter repeated them in the course of his sermon the same night, and read a letter from a lady in Ken tucky, who had joined the Mormon Cnurch, gone to Utah, become disgusted with the practices of the sect, apostatized and re turned to her home. She denounced Mor mon Ism as deceptive and rotten to the core, and the priests and many of the laymen as a set of scoundrels. As a result of Eev. Mr. Barrett's vigor ous denunciation the good citizens informed the elder who preached revolution that he mu$f. leave the community or expect the same treatment resorted to in Lewis county two years ago when several elders were Killed. The elder went to-day and will not be permitted to return. POWER OP THE PRE8S. How a Postal Clerk Who Advertised Se cured a Wife. CnrcnTlTATT, August 9. Guyon Rob erts, then a railway postal clerk on a route running out'of Independence, Kan., three years ago advertised in a Cincinnati paper for a lady correspondent- It was simply a desire for flirtation that prompted him. Among those who answered the advertisement was Miss Saxie Adair, daugh ter of Dr. G. "W. Adair, a well-known den tist of Carlisle, Ky., and who also has a large practice in Paris, Ky., the family be ing among the very best in that Com monwealth. The correspondence was car ried on with increasing ardor. Photographs were exchanged, and finally Miss Saxie wrote "Yes" in answer to a query as to whether she would take Guyon for better or worse. That was two years ago, and until last Saturday the widelseparated lovers, who had become such tnrough tbe mails, had never met. At the Gibson House, in this city, a meeting was arranged, and they were not disappointed with each other. They re newed their vows, and last night quietly plighted their troth for good and for aye. The newly-united pair will leave in the morning for St Louis. They will spend their honevmoon there, and then settle down in Ju'dsonia, Ark., where Mr. Roberts, since the last national election, has estab lished a real estate business. GUESTS AT CAMP 19, a romantic story of life on the frontier of civilization. by franklin File, will be published complete in to-morrouft DISPATCH. For the Family Wash; For House Cleaning done by mistress or servant; for china; glassware; fruit jars; nursing bottles; windows; silver; oil paintings; paintbrushes; straw hats; -wool hats; bead trimming; sinks; closets ; wastes pipes, and a thousand other things in fact, for anything washable Use Pyle's Pearline, Makes white goods whiter Colored goods brighter Flannels softer Paint last longer Pearline means perfect cleanliness Quicker better" with more ease and comfort than anything known; makes a saving all around no soda-eaten holes in linen; no frayed edges; no buttons and strings rubbed off. Millions USe it Do yOU ? iJ7 JAMES PYLB, New York. Soapona HANDS UNINJURED. CLOTHES PURE AND SWEET.. DISHES WASHED CLEAN. THE GREAT WASHING POWDER. BELUS BUFFALO TOK slftTisI STT ftT.Ti OXlOOSXUb 1 5l 4.x , . , ..aasswj- .)V.. , ?ik. i miTinir i 'iiTiftniiirri sliMftlinsWHiMiBii .BOLDLY UPHOLDS POLYGAMY. An Exponnder and Defender of Mormon Dietrlnea la Canada. ISrXCUIj TXLXOKAX TO TBI SISrATCH. I Ottawa, August 9. Mr. A. Maitland Stenhouse, the British Columbian Legisla tor, who has resigned his seat in the Assem bly to join the Mormon colony, at Leth bridge, Northwest Territory, and comes for ward as the champion of polygamy, and u an exponent and defender of the Mormon doctrines, will contest that constituency at the coming general elections for the Domin ion Parliament. He says that polygamy will soon become one of the institutions of the territories, and believes that if properlv represented in Par liament, many of the restrictions which now make polygamy illegal will be with drawn, and the prejudices which now exist against the sect overcome. He says that only among the Latter-Day Saints are the rights of women fully recognized and admitted. His plan for reforming the marriage laws of tbe Dominion, he says, is the substitution of polygamy lor monogamy. He lauds the intelligence and industry of the Mormon, and say: tbat if the Mormon, like the Chinese, must go, monogamv, with its foul following of betrayals and worse will go also, and that very early, in the country. Notwithstanding the efforts of the Gov ernment to prevent it, reports reaching here from the Northwest say, thatlhe Mormons are not waiting for the Stenhouse legisla tion, but are openly practicing polygamy. TRUE TO HER PROMISE. A Dying- Woman Recovers Jnt to Spite ner Hnsband. LevlJton Journal. The chuckling and other-symptoms of sat isfaction led the Oxford county man to tell another story. "A woman, up our way was very sick," said he. "She grew worse and worse, and the doctor finally gave her up. She had fought a good fight for life, but at last made up her mind that she was going to die and said her parting words to her friends. Last of all she had a talk with her husband. " 'John,' said she. 'I'm going to leaveyou forever.' " 'Yes, Mirandy,' said he dropping a tear. " 'I ain't like some women, John. I want yon to be' happy and have a companion through life.' " 'Yes, Mirandy.' , " 'Yes, I want you to marry again, and I've been thinking that one of Mr. Smith's pirls would make vou an excellent wife.' "'Yes, Mirandy, I've been thinking of that same tning myseii. " 'You have, eh? you brute! You better wait till I'm gone before you pick out an other wifel Oh, you wretch! Fixing your heart on another woman before your first wife's underground! But you shan't have her! I'm going to get well just to spite you and Ann Smith!' "The woman was true to her promise. To everybody's astonishment she recovered and lived to attend her husband's funeral." AN UNPROMISING OUTLOOK. A Little Girl's Sace Observation on the Sub ject of Matrimony. New York TrlSnne.3 A little girl of Brooklyn has the misfor tune to have a father of little ability and an aunt of little amiability. Contemplating these two, recently, she said to her mother: "Mother, when I grow up will I have to marry a man like father, or be an old maid like Aunt Jane?" The mother replied: "Yes, my dear." Then that thoughtful child said: ."What a hard time we poor women have, don't we, mother?" 1T IITUI'V 11 4TT in to-morrow's Dis JiLAAElLI IlAliL, patch, describes the trials and tribulations of a British matron in search of neip. anI(V32 SOAP BEST SOAP MLAJ3E CUPOLA IROtf 0RKS. A Patent Process for Making the Pig Metal. MR. J. S. OURSLER TALKS. The iron foundry of Messrs. Keal Bros, on Preble'avenue, Allegheny, is one of the most interesting plas ot the kind in the city to visit, owing to the peculiar mode by which the pig iron is manufactured. It is known as the cupola process, and they have a patent of their own for making it Mr. J. S. Oursler, of No. 20 Orchard street, Alle gheny, is the engineer at the works, and to him the writer is indebted for the following interesting interview. "I should judge it was between six and seven years ago," he said, "that I first noticed my trouble. At that time it seemed to be nothing more than a severe cold. Gradually it began to grow worse. My nostrils became clogged, and Z seldom breathed through my nose. My head was all stopped up and I had much headache between and directly over the eyes. There was a buzzing and roaring sound in my ears, which finally became stopped up to such an extent as to interfere with my hearing. Oftentimes when asleep at night I would be awakened by a snarp report as of something bursting in my ear. "This condition continued for a long time, and finally I went to a physician for treat ment He did me so good, and I tried others, but all with the same effect; I grew worse instead of better. "A dry, hacking cough had been added to my troubles, and I was 'coughing con tinually. I could feel the mucous dropping back from my head into my throat, and I raised a great deal of phlegm in the morn ings. At first it was a foam-white sub stance. But of late years it has been very thick and yellow, choking me when I raised it. Mr. J. S. Gursler, SO Orchard SL. Allegheny. "My eyes became very much inflamed and discharged a watery substance. My throat and the root of my tongue wera always sore. My throat was ulcerated and my tongue highlr inflamed. ''When I would get up from a chair I would be dizzy and weak. Sharp shooting pains would go through my chest and in the left side, extending to the shoulder blade. Frequently the pain would extend into the region of the stomach "I always slept soundly at night, but was never rested in the morning, leeling more tired than when I went to bed the night be fore. I could eat, but I did notrrelish my food. "I found that I was losintr flesh and stead ily growing weaker, and it was when in tho condition described above tbat I first beard of Drs. Copeland and Blair. I bad tried so many physicians tbat I bad lostfaitb. bat determined to see them. Tbey did not promise to perform any miracles, but I felt tbat tbey could do me. food. Tbelr charges were very reasonable, so! placed myself under their care. "I soon found a decided improvement in my. condition. My head and cbest ceased to pain me. My eyes became strong and clear. Ibavo no more trouble with my ears, and can bear well. My throat and tongue are no longer nK cerated or inflamed. Tbe pains in my cbest and side bave disappeared, and I no longer bave tbat backing coagh to annoy me. I feel rested in tho mornings, and can relish mr food. 1 bave crown strong and gamea in weight. In fact I feel like a new man." Mr. Oursler lives, as stated, at No. 20 Orchard street. Allegheny, and bis statement can bo readily verified. THE CREAHAN CASE. A Remarkible Statement Msds by a Wall Known Machinist of Alleghany. Mr. James Creahan, a well-known ma chinist, residing at 41 Mulberry street, and is engaged at Lindsay & McCutcheon's ma chine shop at the foot of Bidge avenue, AI-; lecheny, in an interview with the writer, said: I was steadily and constantly losing ray health and strength. My appetite failed) me. I could sleep well enough, but would' arise in the morning tired and unfit for, work. I dreaded the slightest exertion. I, just managed to drag myself1 through my work. My eyes began to trouble me, then my ears would hava buzz and roarine; sounds. My eyes became dim andr watenr, and I would have sharp pains in my ears. For three years or more I. felt that this catarrhal trouble was extending, and! it has been within,! the last tno vears Mr. Creahan. tbat I began toex- ferience its constitutional effects. Whatllttla did eat I had to force down, and it made me feel as tboncb there was a heavy load on my stomach. My heart gave me so much trouble, and I had one attack that nearly caused my death. It was then that I bad to give up mr work, which was a serious thing for rae. I bad heart! of Drs. Copeland and Blair. I went to see them. Their charges were reasonable. I placed myself under their care. 1 improved steadily. My appetite returned. I got refreshing nights of sleep, and woke np In the morning feeling rested and strong. My ears ceased to pain me. My eyes became strong. Tbe pain aDont my heart left me. r was able to return to work. There Is not a, trace of my tronble left now. I am as well as I was four years ago, and it is complete and per manent. I am grateful to tbe doctors for my restoration. DOCTORS MAIDfflill D- Are located permanently &t . 66 SIXTH AVE., J Where tbey treatwitb suceoss all curable cues." Office hours fltoll A.M.i2to5 p. at.; 7to9 p. ir. (Sunday included). Specialties CATARRH, and ALL SIS EASES of the EYE. EAR, THROAT and LONGS. Consultation, u. Auaress sai man to Tjks. COPELAND BLAI tf Sixth, are,, Fmsbv., l -..?, ssssR TV PIskw iVifsrhfrAifiirii-fi '!